By HBA I suspect you mean a non-RAID HBA?

Yes, something like the HBA355

NVMe SSDs shouldn’t cost significantly more than SATA SSDs.  Hint:  certain 
tier-one chassis manufacturers mark both the fsck up.  You can get a better 
warranty and pricing by buying drives from a VAR.

              We stopped buying “Vendor FW” drives a long time ago. Although 
when the PowerEdge R750 originally came out they removed the ability for the 
DRAC to monitor the endurance of the non-vendor SSDs to penalize us, it took 
about 6 months or arguing to get them to put that back in.

It’s a trap!  Which is to say, that the $/GB really isn’t far away, and in fact 
once you step back to TCO from the unit economics of the drive in insolation, 
the HDDs often turn out to be *more* expensive.

              I suppose depending on what DWPD/endurance you are assuming on 
the SSDs but also in my very specific case we have PBs of HDDs in inventory so 
that costs us…no additional money. My comment on there being more economical 
NVMe disks available was simply that if we are all changing over to NVMe but we 
don’t right now need to be able to move 7GB/s per drive it would be cool to 
just stop buying anything with SATA in it and then just change out the drives 
later.  Which was kind of the vibe with SATA when SSDs were first introduced. 
Everyone disagrees with me on this point but it doesn’t really make sense that 
you have to choose between SATA or NVME on a system with a backplane.

But yes I see all of your points as far as if I was trying to build a Ceph 
cluster as primary storage and had a budget for this project. That would indeed 
change everything about my algebra.

Thanks for your time and consideration I appreciate it.

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